The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 280, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 14, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL, TUESDAY MORNING. MARCH 14. 1311.
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MANY BATTLES
in __::::::
Insurgents Have Renewed Active
Campaign Along
Line
MANY AMERICANS KILLED
Center of Trouble Zone Seeim to
Be About Chihuahua Rebels
Active in Sonora Two Hun-
dred Killed Recently
EI- PASO, Texas, March 13. -Two hun-
dred Mexican regular! an.l ln urrecto
have heen killed and wounded In the
three latest battles tiI the revolution,
as u result of which the revolutionary
force* have gained ground In their ex-
tended campaign In the Mate of Sonora,
but have Buffered In Chihuahua.
The rebels today are In possesion of
1 h«* town Navao, Senora but io*t many
of their beat men, officers an.l soldiers
of the foreign legion, about Casas Grande
The rebels were masting their foncs
bet . ie Agua Prelta today after bein<
driven off last night by a galling cannon-
ade from the federals' machine gunn.
Th<> three hundred federals In the garri-
son t A«ua Prieta supported the artil-
lery fire by constant 'olleys of musketry.
The rebels had tried to < ipture the town
under cover of darkness after bombard-
Inu It all day.
After capturing the town of Navajo,
the rebels burned ail the bridges in tho
vicinity to check a reinforcement of tho
federals who drew off after discovering
the o\erwhelming strength of the enemy.
V great deal of doubt exists as to the
American d«•«d and vamtnded abmit Casan
Grande The junta here received word
today thai Captain R F. Harrington,
an American soldier of fortune, and
Giufcppe Oarabaldl dcsirndant of the
Kalian patriot, bad only boen wounded
and not killed.
Conditions In Chihuahua and ihe oper-
ations of the rebels under Madero and
Ge'icral Hlaneo Indicate thai the uisiir-
rectos w|i| try lo starve the city inlo ?
surrender General Orozeo I understood
to 1 somewhere in tin- mounta'n n ar
Chihuahua ready to attach Hie town on
orders from Madero.
Famine comlithui prevail in "ther -i'
les in the Interior of ''hlhualmii b. «• i.s.%
of the Interrupted railroad service Sun
plies cannot be shipped either norlli or
routh.
Americans Captured
DOUGLAS. Ariz.. March I' Eleven
dead and seven wounded on the federal
side: one dead, one injured and thirteen
taken prisoner all of whom are reported
t have been shot at sun-down las*
evening -on the lnsurrecto side is the
reported result of a battle which took
place five miles easi < f Agua Preta, he
tween two hundred and lift> federals
under Colonel Mora and five hundred and
flftj. Insurrectos under General Blanco
\esterda> '!'. > lit! t:u^ wis continued
throughout the da\.
^ large portion of Douglans' six ihous
a id population visited the scene of bat ti"
a id man of them a'«* reported a* hu>'
<ng been maltreated Charles Roc... h. :tu
American photogispher, : «-..n ■ • • m
battle eld im< i ideycb'. m a l.iyonet" I
and half his scalp torn awa\ a usv
lean federal soldi, i , who further t eat
him with his gun .ift**r having broken
hi* earners ami taUing li s bicycle ' ron:
him.
P.oesch Is said to/be held a prisoner.
AVm. We i and F.d Settle. Americans,
Mme captured by Federals and hell
^M'lsonejs until night, when the United
States authorities demanded their release
Captain Harry Wheeler of the Arizona
rangers, who had gone to the rebel
camp to look for a strayed horse, was
attacked by federal< and fully iffy shots
were fired at hint, but he escaped in-
Jury.
"Yankees" are Killed
EL PASO, Texas. March 13 -Corn led
de'ails of the bailie of Cgsas (irandc^
week ago today indicate that 1." Amerl
cans were killed, and 17 captuied.
Among the killed were R. F. Harrington,
of Fl Paso, former sergeant In the United
State* arm> : Robert I vans of San Fran-
olseo, and Hoy Glenn of Mint i.il Wells,
Texas.
Have You Rheumatism, Kidney,
Liver or Bladder Trouble?
Pain and dull ache in the back is
evidence of kidne> trouble. It is Na-
ture's timely warning to show you
that the track of health is not clear.
Dangtr Signals
]f these danger signals are unheed-
ed more serious results follow .
Bright' disease, which is the j^orat
form of kidney trouble, may steal up-
on you.
The mild and immediate effect of
8wanp-Root the great kidney, liver
and bladder remedy Is soon realized
It stands tho highest for its remark-
able curative effect In the most dis-
tressing cases If you need a medi-
cine. you should have the best.
Lame Back
I.flme back Is nn'.v one of many
symptom" of kidney trouble. Other
nyitomH showing you that you need
ftwamp-Root are. being obliged to
iiaas water often during the day and
t• • get up many tlirns during the
night.
Inabll'ty to hold urine, smarting In
passing, uric add, headaches dlasl-
hess, Indigestion, sleeplessness. ner\
ouness. sometimes the heart acts bad-
iy. rheumatism, bloating, lack of am-
bition may be joss of flenh, sallow
com plexlon.
Provalency of Kidney Disease
Most people do not reali'.-e the
alarming Increase and remarking pre-
yalem y of kidney disease. While kid-
ney disorders are the most common
diseases that prevail, they are al-
most th" last recognized by patients
and physicians, who usually content
themselves with doctoring the effects
while the orlgnal disease constantly
undermines the system
A Trisl Will Convince Anyone
In taking Swanp Root you afford
natural help to Nature, for Swamp-
Root Is a gentle healing herbal com-
pound -a physicians prescription for hamton, X. V.,
special diseases, on every bottle.
EDITORIAL NOTICE—To prove the wonderful merits of Hwump-Root
you may have a sample bottle and a book of valuable information both
sent absolutely free by mail. The book contains many of the thousands
of letters received from men and women who found Swamp-ltoot to be
Just the remedy they needed. Tho value and success of Swamp-Root is
so well known that our readers are advised to serd for a sample bottle.
Address Dt Kilmer & Co.. Rlnghamton. N. Y. be sure to say you read
lb generous offer in the Guthrie StfHe Capital The genuineness of
Ibis offer is guaranteed.
"TED"
RIDES A HORSE
Visits Army Camp at
Antonio Which Is
Mud Sea
Sail
SOLDIERS IN HARD RAIN
May Abandon Attack on Galves-
ton and Play Game Alo.-t'
Bolder—Troops Are Down to
Truly Hard Work
Swamp-Root Is alvvnyK kl!|it up to Its
high standard of purity and excel-
sworn certificate of pur-
ity with every bottle.
lence.
Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar
size bottles at all drug stores.
Don't make any mistake, but re-
member the name. Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Hoot and the address. Ring
'., which ' ou will find
IS
preparations of |
even limestone,
Piles Driven
.<4 way FREE
Cases Of Extreme Torture Cured
So Quick As To Amaze All
Who Know The Terrors
Of Piles.
Even * small and recent c**e of piles is
bad enough but thousands are in abject
misery. Great protrusions render life a
torture in every community and yet. right
within elbow room «a certainly a diug
store that has the wonderful Pyramid
Pile Cure. If not. It will be mailed frea
upon receipt of the regu>ar price—50c.
R works like a hundred awlft streams
of water on a sudden blare, puts the fire
out, saves lives, saves the nerves pre-
vents gangrene, stops a I pain ail itch-
ing. all bleeding, reduces ail swellings
O0c1 -al or externa', cure: quick and
complete to stay cured Many severe
oases think thoy ate hopeless, must be
opctated on, have part of their anatomy
•ut and carved. Don't let It happen.
Remember anything cut off is gone for
ever Pyramid pile ure saves all this,
cures rationally, restores the parts to
normal healthy condition*. You can
easily and quicktv prove this by *nding
your name and address to Pyramid Drug
Co.. 27S Pyramid Pldg., Marshall, Mich
A free trial will ut once e mailed seals I
in plain w rapper and you will ne"er af-
terwards be at a loss to know what to
advise when you hear of a case of piles
no matter how severe It may br .
For sale at all drug stores at 50< i
package and be sure you get what you
A*k for.
coal, crude oil or
n the progress of
the world requires that they should.
"If we could evolve an animal it
"Hf useful and edible that could thri
on some of the energ\-containing sub-
stances now used wastefully or hard-
ly at all, he food problem of the
human race would be near solution,
or its difficulties Indefinitely post-
poned.
Dr Hille who is a graduate of
'■••iiiian universities, declared that all
life is hemlcal and that be had dis-
cos..,! a chemical compound which
contains hi solution every chemical
form in Ihe human body, that by use
o| litis, vegetables as food ma.v be
• rmanated. and the chemist of the
future Instead of the butcher and
baker, will supply tho food of the pop-
ulaco.
Dr. I Miles passed test tubes about the
ha'1 showing living germs and fungi
feasting on what had been regarded
as deadly poison. Tie showed one
flask that demonstrated that it !s pos-
sible to transmute the inorganic Into
the organic. The flask contained a
form of true organic copper, while Its
surface was covered with a thick layer
of fungi notwithstanding the presence
of a large proportion of copper sul-
phate.
"II re we have concentrated, organic
copper solution, a deadly poison,"
said T">r TUHe, "acting as the Ideal
food for these fungi!" He declared
that Dr Swann. of South Chicago,
had cured one ca*e of lubercolosls wit
organic copper, while Dr Webster was
employing it on another case with
flattering results."
law had to be avoided. Finally the at-
tention of members of the house and sen-
ate were called to the proposed corpora-
tion tax as a constitutional measure. It
was urged as preferable to another In-
come tax which. It was argued, probablv
would be declared unconstitutional and
a- under th« circumstances better leg-
islation than an Inheritance tax. When
the tariff bill was In the senate the cor-
poration tax provisions were inserted as
an amendment to the Payne bill passed
by the house They remained there and
became a pa it of the tariff act.
The provisions of the law stated that
Ihe tax was a "special excise fa* with
respect to the carrying on or doing busi-
ness." It was to be paid by "every cor-
poration, joint stock company or asso-
ciation, organised for profit and having a
capital represented by shares, and every
insurance company, organised under the
laws of the United State- m of a v state
or territory." It was provided 'bat tho
tax should "equivalent to one per
cent u
and
the outi
net
$5,000 received from s'l
sources. exclusive of amounts received
as dividends upon stock of other corpo-
rations, joint stock companies or ssso-
rial ions, or insurance companies, sub-
ject to the tax.
Tho law provided also that returns
should lie in a d bv those taxed to the
Treasut v Department, to b« used as a
ba*i.« for assessing the lax These were
open to inspection, but In HMO cons
enacted legalatioii providing that flic re-
turns should be open to in po<'lttjn only
upon rules and regulation^ approvej bv
Ihe president.
The flrM action In the courts to ten?
the constitutionally of the law was '
gun in tho United States circuit court for
I ho district of Vermont. A woman be
gan it. Stella IV IHint, guardian of the
property of Samuel N. Stone, Jr., a
stockholder in the Stone Tracy com
pany, of Windsor, Yt . began an action
to have the company restrained from
paying the tax. She claimed that the
ta . was unconstitutional. Her attor-
ne\ Maxwell Evarts, brought the case
•o the supreme court, after the circuit
court bad declined to hold the tax un-
coi stitutlonal.
When the Stone Tracy case came up
for argument l efore the supreme court
in March. Ifllft, fourteen other cases
likewise raising the validity of the law
and decisions likewise sustaining the
constitutionality of the tax. had reached
th« court. They were advanced and
heard with the original case. Recause
presumably of vacancies on the bench,
the eases were restored to the docket for
reargument. This reargument occurred
in January, 1911.
The constitutionally of the tsx ^-a?*
attacked from all the points from which
any tax possible of enactment by eon-
grers could be attacked. Prominent
among the objections to the law was
the argument that the tax was a direct
tax, not apportioned, according to the
constitution. Some dubbed the tax
corporation income tax" and invalid for
the same reasons that the income tax
was declared unconstitutional In 1896.
Others claimed that it was a tax on state
franchise^ and hence was an unconstitu-
tional Interference with the sovereignty
of the states. Another line of objection
were based on the argument that as an
excise tax, It was not uniform but con-
tained unconstitutional classifications.
The publicity features of the returns
were at (a. ki d as taking private property
without compensation. To all of these
objections, the Department of Justice,
through tne late solicitor general. Lloyd
W Bowers, at the first bearing, and
through his successor, Frederick W. I,eh-
tnann, at the second hearing, made an-
swer.
After the argument of the fifteen cases,
the court took up three other cases in
volvlng the tax. Tn these the principal
controversy was over the interpretation
of the law The leading point was
whether the tax was to be Imposed on
"Boston trusts " organized to hold real
estate, but not Incorporated. The Boston
concerns contended that the lax should
lw assessed onlv < n concerns organized
the statues of the United States,
or territories. The go\ernmenf
that business concerns organised
w were included
be taxed
SAN ANTONIO. Texas, Mar. 18.—
Welcomed by a salute of artillery and
attired in a mud spashed suit and ac-
companied by Governor Colquitt and
staff, ex-President Theodore Roosevelt
inspected the maneuver camp at Fort
Sam Houston today. Spurning a car-
riage, the former president insisted
on riding a spirited cavalry horse and
he galloped so furiousy that the mem-
bers of the governor's stafff ha 1 a dif-
ficult task to keep pace with him.
The heavy rain of yesterday had left
the government reservation a sea of
mud. but Colonel Roosevelt did not al
low that to Interfere with his progress
Giving his mount free rein he dashed
through the field with the mud and
water spraying all within range Gov-
ernor Couqiiltt who headed his staff,
is somewhat of a rider himself, but
was easily ontdlstinced.
On account of tho mud the proposed
review of the troops was cancelled.
After riding over the field, where ho
was loudly cheered by tho men, Col-
onel Roosevelt and his escort repaired
to tho headquarters of Major Genera*
Wm. H. Carter, the commandant
General Carter and his staff welcomed
the visitors. Colonel Roosevelt re-
main d at the camp only thirty min-
UteB.
The great camp got down to stern
mi'ile> rout'ne today. Although a
ect'on of the parade ground is
mass deep sticky mud. the higher
part of the field Is dray and In excelent
shape.
Reports are persistent tnat the ong
na! p'an to "storm" Gaheston will be
abandoned and that the "maneuvering"
will take place along the banks of the
Rio Grande This move would servo
the double purpose of drilling the sol-
diers and prevent the smuggling of
arms and ammunition across to the in-
surreetos.
\ wireess station has been con-
structed. It is said that a series of
wireless stations will be erected near
the border line.
The movement of wagon trains is
go'ng forward with much difficulty be-
cause of the condition of the roads
abou*. San Antonio. In sonic places
the mud Is over a foot deep.
TO CURE A COLD I* OWE DAT
Take LAXATIVE HBO MO Quinine Tablet*
If it fails to «
' it on each box.
unde
state
wit hi
"BATH T(JB" CRIMINAL GASES
All of Defendants Will Be Called
to Answer Indictments With-
out Immunity of Any Sort
the criml
Individuals
trust
Mil the
washington, p. c,
The government will mov
nal trial of the thirt> fo t
and fourteen corporations
fondants in the "bath tut
the first week In April
The statement is uithor'
made at the department ti nt
defendants win be called t 1 nnuwei
the indictments without immunity of
an> sort or degree having iv • , grant d
to an> Attorney General Wicker-
sham has several time.* avowed be
would press for jail sentences in ihe
event convictions and twi ■ re
omproniise on n'eas of guilty
is. d to
nd fines only.
The date of the trial was decided
fter negotatng wth the defendants at
orne> Tin courts havi over r;iled
ill pl< .i of Immunity and
vhich have been raised.
continent according to Henry Clifford
Stuart who until about ten months
ago had lived in Mexico and Centra]
America for twenty-five years.
—o
GEN. WOODS PLAN
WASHINGTON, P. C, March 13,
Major General leonard Wood, chief of
sthff, will not leave Washington for
the scene of the maneuvers on the
Mexican frontier, it Is stated at the
war department today. It Is possible
he may go in May to inspect and re-
view the troops, but will not depart
sooner in the absence of any alarm
ing turn of the events on the border."
ANXIOUS TO SCRAP
WASHINGTON, P. C, March 13.—
The enthusiasm of the officers of the
militia of the states and territories
over the opportunity for field experi-
ence m the present military operations
in the souther border states continues
unabated. Since Saturday General
Wood, chief of staff of the army, has
received acceptances from 705 addi-
tional militia officers of the invitation
to join the 'maneuver division" at San
Antonio, Texas, making a total
1,950 acceptances.
The states just heard from and the
number of officers are:
Alabama 1; Arizona 25; Colorado
72 Connecticut -'N; Georgia 72; Mary
land V Michigan 136; Minnesota 34
Nebraska 29; New Jersey 14; Now
Mexico y North Carolina 44; North
Dakota lft. Rhode Island 2; South
Carolina 76; Virginia 111.
The District of Columbia and thir
tepn states have not yet responded.
Major General Carter, comniandingl
the troops at San Antonio, has been]
asked by the war department to pre-
pare a program Indicating the number
he can accomodate at one time. When
this is received the department wili ar-
range a schedule to urant. if possible,
field instruction to all the officers
who have accepted. According to the
present plan, about 'J00 will be sent
southward at one time and the period
of instruction will be about two weeks
Indicating the interest of the militia
officers, General Oliver, acting secre-
tary of war, has been overwhelmed
with applications to participate in
the maneuvers. General Oliver has
explained, however, that it is the func-
tion of the governors of the states,
rather than the war department, to
make th- selections
NEW
ADLERrRCCMESTER CLOTHES
for Men and Young Men
NEW
John B. Stetson Hats
NEW
Knox Hats
NEW
Manhattan Shirts
NEW
Stetson's Low Shoes
NEW
Boys' Long and Knick-
erbocker Pant Suits
LEADING CLOTHIER
(CONTINUED FROM PAGT ONE)
ness a? a Senator of the United Siaies
to force these matters to the front and
extend their application He believes
that politicians will find It impossible lo
stand in the way and that these meth-
ods of giving voice to the popular will
be generally adopted.
A good many of the Democratic Sen-
ators who are not in favor of the initia-
tive ami referendum and the retail feel
that it is utterly wrong for Congress to
interfere in the question of what kind
of a constiutlon a Territory should
adopt prior to admission a- a State.
They say that It Is the privilege ot Ari-
zona to frame its own constitution with-
out Interference.
Malaria Pal«-. Mekly Children
Th« Old Standard Grove's Tastelem CI1
Tonic, drites out malaria and build* up lb
tyatem. tor grown d?opIb aufl children Wc
MORE OPIUM SEIZED
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., March 13.
—On information cabled from China,
customs inspectors overhauled the
steamship Mongolia on her arrival
here today and seized 1 '11 tins of opium
valued at $6000.
WILL GET TRIAL
WASHINGTON, D C March 13.—
R Doran. a clti7.cn of Arizona, who
in held nrisoner by the Mexican federal
forces at Hermosillo, is in no danger
of violence and is assured a fair
trial, according to a telegram received
today b> the state department from
American Conlul Hostetter at Her-
mosillo
The consul taya that P->r*n will ,-,e
I • o g federal Judge at N'OftlM
I Mexico
EXPORTS INCREASE
WASHINGTON, P. C, March 13.—
Breaking all records fu. February,
last month's exports were valued at
$ 175,996,467, while the Imports, larger
than In any earlier February except
In 1910 and 1907, were valued at $121,-
766.284.
THE KIDNEYS are strengthened
and toned by Hood's Sarsaparilla
—it cures all their ailments, pains in
the loins and THE BACKACHE.
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
it. When the man, Thomas Shields,
came to me and said, '1 will live here,
I own you, you belong to mo, 1 paid
for you,' l thought ho was crazy
said. 'You won't live here,* and 1 tried
to drive him out, then he showed me
m> marriage certificate and «sai<l he
bought it and me for 51. I snat h<d
it from him and 1 have It now where
he can't get it, but I am afr-iV."
Magistrate Hughes sent t o of hi"
officers to the woman's home to
her story. They could get no 'rn ->f
the transaction, but they roun<i * irh
poverty and wretchedness in th !'oine
that they notified the Society
lect Children from Cruelty to < me
and look after the three ut • one*.
The youngsters were huddled to-
gether on the kitchen floo before
the stove, which apparently had not
had fire in it for da."* Th baby was
crying "'i1"1' 1 f T"' agid
5. and George, a year or so • ouni.'« r •
were gnawing at (hips of wood which
they had picked up In the street There
as not a vestige of food in th" house
nd tho children were blue with cold
and half starved In one of the up-
stairs rooms, the officers found an
maciated boy. Mrs Gugisa's brother,
who recently came from Polanu and
who is suffering with tuberculosis
When the mother came 'n he told
tho officers that her husband, who dis-
appeared a week ago, took with him
$3.50 she had scraped together.
Magistrate Hughes provided encugh
oney to buy food for the family for
few days.
(CONTINUED FROM PAG. ONE)
kis«ing only one person. Miss Bush of
forcing her affection upon two.
The building mover, plumber, coal
dealer's foreman, contractor lumber-
man and banker who decide West-
hampton Beach's educational moral af-
fairs are studying up all they can
learn about kisses of the plain, school
variety, as well as the Nethersole,
"Waltz Dream, vacuum cleaner and Na-
toma persuasion, so as to be prepared
to rend proper justice.
Throwing gallantry the Great
South Ba\ winds, Principal Richmond
told this story of the kiss;
"Miss Bush, who came here last fall,
opposed a certain 'continuity of sys-
tem' which I originated for our school.
I had certain ideas about teaching
pronunciation which she refused to
accept, so she tried to get around mo
ami have me let her use her own meth-
ods. Her method was to kiss me.
And His Wife Standing By
"First, over at Riverhead she kissed
me one day, while my wife was stand-
ing right bj. And she knew that my
wife was in favor of .continuity of
system,' too. Then onco again, while
my wife was at a sociable In the village
here and I 'vas at home, she came
there and kissed me again.
1 about, though,
was one afternoon, after all my pupils
had been sent home from my Class-
room and m\ wife was up in the villago
shopping. Inex Bush tiptoed into the
room when I wasn't looking and threw
h r arms around me.
"I struggled against her, but sho
was us strong as a young moose, and
- overpow ered me. Then she hugg< <1
and kissed me. I shouted at her:
Inez Bush what do you mean? And
right here in the class room too? (;<•
r'ght out of heir* and don't ever do
air thing jike that again "
Principal Richmond bridled in
righteous indignation at ex.-n tho
memory of the stolen kiss by fair
Inez He went on:
l let her know then and there that
she couldn't influence me in my 'con-
tunity , f system' by anv such tac-
tics."
At that time Mr Richmond ex-
plained he felt thai it would be unfair
i" make public Miss Bush's Impet-
uosity. He j ist let matters drift. But
soon afterward. Mrs Theodore Hulse.
mother of the aforesaid 14 > ear old
Lester complained to him that Miss
Bush had been k4.--s«ng I,ester. and de-
manded that he bring charges Against
her.
He didn't want to do It, but Mrs.
Hu'se forced him to g-i In return, lie
sHid. Miss Bush licensed him of ha\
Ing forftbl \ klvaed e r To his charge
and "rublx
littlic Lest'
H 1
pn-
vho is U
that he had kii
cheeks together" v
the principal added that
lated his 'continuity ays
two charges together, h
clj itated her kiss chargt
Miss Bush, who is II
home of the local stage
that he and her "friend '
local weekly newspaper reporter, had
advised her to sav nothing until Fri-
da> night, when the school board de-
cides who kissed whom.
1'nfortunately the reporter who ln-
tervicwed Principal Richmond waji
well on his way back to New York
before he remembered that he had
forgotten to ask Mr. Richmond Just
what "continuity of system" meant.
Welcome Words to Women
^ omen who sc-ffcr with dinorden peouliar to thefr
sex should write to Pr. Pierre and receive free the
advice of a physician of over 40 years' experience
—a skilled and successful <peoialist in the diseases
of women. Fvery letter of this sort has the most
careful consideration and is regarded as sacredly
confidential. Many sensitively modest women writa
fijlly to l)r. Pierce what they would shrink Irora
telling to their looal physician. The local physician
is pretty sure to say that he cannot do anything
without "un examination." Dr. Pierce holds that
these distasteful :*aminutions are generally need-
Leas, and that m womnn, except in r«re easel, should submit to them.
Dr. Pierce's treatment will cure you ri*b! in the privacy of
. Tour own home. His w F„orite Prescription"* has oured
hundreds ot thousand,, some of them the worst of cases.
It is the only medicine of its kind thst is the product of • regularly Jradunted
physician. The only one food enough that its makers dare to print its every
ingredient on its outside wrapper. There's uo secrecy. It * ill hear examine,
tion. No alcohol anrf no habit-forminj drugs are found in it. Some unscrup.
ulous medicine dealers may o8er you a substitute. Don't take it Don't trifie
with -n„r health Wnre tn «.,!••'. |) u.m M-dic.l elation. Dr. R.
. Pierce, F resident, Hviffalo, N. \ take the advice received an«J be well.
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 280, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 14, 1911, newspaper, March 14, 1911; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127703/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed May 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.